logo
Hong Kong plans to regulate Uber and other online ride-hailing services

Hong Kong plans to regulate Uber and other online ride-hailing services

Mint6 days ago
HONG KONG (AP) — The Hong Kong government on Tuesday unveiled proposals to regulate online ride-hailing services provided by tech companies like Uber, requiring platforms, cars and drivers to be licensed before hitting the road.
In a document sent to the legislature, transport officials said those companies applying for a license would need to have business registration and an office in the city. They also said the platforms would have to fulfill certain conditions on operating experience, proof of financial capability and capital investment, in addition to ensuring the cars and drivers working for them already purchased the required insurance.
Under the licensing plans, eligible drivers must have held a private car driving license for at least one year and have no serious traffic convictions within five years. The drivers also need to pass a test and complete training.
Officials plan to set a quota on the number of vehicles allowed to be run under the policy, adding that the cars cannot be over seven years old and have to pass an annual inspection.
Currently, it is illegal for drivers of private vehicles to provide paid services to customers without a permit. Police have arrested some Uber drivers suspected of driving without a permit in the past and in 2018, more than two dozen drivers were fined.
Uber, which started operating in Hong Kong in 2014, has faced multiple legal and regulatory challenges in its overseas expansion but remains popular in the semi-autonomous Chinese city, where many residents are frustrated with poor taxi services.
Some taxi companies have long resisted online platforms like Uber, seeing them as a threat to their business.
Hong Kong leader John Lee said the legislative framework would need to ensure the co-existence of online ride-hailing services and traditional taxi services. Transport officials could first handle issues with consensus and set up the framework before focusing on other controversial technical problems, Lee said.
'I agree the problem is complicated but it should not be further delayed,' he said.
In the document, the government said it would consider charging the platforms fees to provide resources for supporting the taxi industry in improving its service quality. It also suggested the companies allow taxi drivers to offer services through their platforms.
Officials aimed to propose the changes in the third quarter of the year to set out matters in principle first. They planned to suggest further legal amendments for other issues in the first half of 2026.
Uber Hong Kong welcomed the regulatory framework in a statement, saying it was encouraged to see safety and service standards placed at the center of the proposals.
'While we commend this progress, we remain concerned about the proposed cap on the number of ridesharing vehicles. Artificial limits risk increasing wait times, raising prices for riders and restricting earning opportunities for drivers,' it said.
It said it looked forward to continuing dialogue with the government and other stakeholders.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI diplomacy: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's Beijing visit draws fan frenzy; chipmaker reopens H20 sales in China
AI diplomacy: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's Beijing visit draws fan frenzy; chipmaker reopens H20 sales in China

Time of India

time34 minutes ago

  • Time of India

AI diplomacy: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's Beijing visit draws fan frenzy; chipmaker reopens H20 sales in China

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's recent visit to Beijing has sparked a wave of public enthusiasm, with videos on Chinese social media showing the billionaire executive signing autographs, posing for selfies, and mingling with fans on the streets—an unusual sight for a global tech CEO. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now This marked Huang's third visit to China in 2025 and coincided with the reopening of H20 chip sales in the country following a US-imposed ban in April. The head of the world's most valuable company arrived in China last week to attend the China International Supply Chain Expo, just days after meeting US President Donald Trump. Huang's presence in Beijing came amid growing geopolitical tensions and trade restrictions between Washington and Beijing, with Nvidia's $17 billion China business caught in the middle of an intensifying technology rivalry, Reuters reported. "Jensen Huang's visit aimed to demonstrate Nvidia's commitment to the Chinese market," said Lian Jye Su, chief analyst at Omdia. "However, this commitment must be balanced against potential US government concerns about deepening ties with China." In Beijing, Huang praised Chinese AI models developed by DeepSeek, Alibaba, and Tencent as 'world class', and said demand for Nvidia's H20 chips had surged since the launch of DeepSeek models in January. He also held meetings with senior Chinese officials, including Vice Premier and trade tsar He Lifeng and Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, which he described as 'wonderful'. "Nvidia will still need to see the tide clearly and ride it at the right time to maximize the available benefits. But good for the company, I think it has a CEO who's very good at doing that," said Tilly Zhang, a technology analyst with Gavekal Dragonomics, quoted Reuters. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Despite the warm reception, some analysts say Nvidia's dominance in China could face long-term challenges. "The Chinese government will actively help or subsidize domestic rivals that can one day stand up to and, at least in some use cases, replace high-end Nvidia chips," said Charlie Chai, an analyst with 86Research. When asked how US officials reacted to his China trip, Huang told reporters, 'I told President Trump and his cabinet that I was coming to China. Told him about my trip here, and he said, 'Have a great trip'." At the Expo, Huang wore a traditional black Chinese-style jacket instead of his trademark leather one and referred to himself as "Chinese" during his speech. He lauded the scale of China's supply chain as 'vast' and praised even strategic rival Huawei Technologies. "I think the fact of the matter is, anyone who discounts Huawei and anyone who discounts China's manufacturing capability is deeply naive. This is a formidable company," Huang said.

Robotaxi battle royale: Uber's latest move should worry Tesla
Robotaxi battle royale: Uber's latest move should worry Tesla

Mint

time35 minutes ago

  • Mint

Robotaxi battle royale: Uber's latest move should worry Tesla

Next Story Liam Denning Elon Musk's EV maker may get left in the dust by rivals in the emerging market for driverless taxis if it doesn't get its act together. How this market shapes up is unknown, but Tesla can't take the leadership for granted that's priced into its stock. Tesla's leadership of the US driverless taxi market is far from assured. Gift this article Conventional wisdom has it that the rise of robotaxis is bad for Uber and oh-so-good for Tesla. But conventional wisdom is the antithesis of disruption. Along comes a deal to hammer home the point: Uber's autonomous vehicle partnership with Lucid and Nuro. Tesla should watch out. Conventional wisdom has it that the rise of robotaxis is bad for Uber and oh-so-good for Tesla. But conventional wisdom is the antithesis of disruption. Along comes a deal to hammer home the point: Uber's autonomous vehicle partnership with Lucid and Nuro. Tesla should watch out. The three companies are teaming up to build a fleet of at least 20,000 robotaxis, using Lucid's Gravity electric SUV fitted with Nuro's autonomous vehicle (AV) system, and owned and operated by Uber or third-party partners. They plan to deploy the first ones next year in an unnamed major US city. As part of the deal, Uber will invest in both companies. For Lucid, the funding is to refit its assembly line to incorporate Nuro's technology. But along with the sales pipeline, it has already refit Lucid's distressed stock: Having fallen by nearly 90% over the past three years, it jumped by more than a third on the news as an army of short bets got squeezed. Also Read: Tesla's robotaxis are here: Everything you need to know In theory, robotaxis are bad for Uber's ridesharing business, letting the likes of Waymo, Alphabet's AV unit, Tesla and a few others eat into its business. In December, Uber's stock suffered its single biggest one-day drop in more than two years on news of Waymo's expansion to Miami. The reality, however, is that AVs, currently less than 1% of the rideshare market, aren't suddenly going to displace human drivers. Rather, we'll likely see a hybrid model develop. Like airlines, making AVs profitable relies largely on higher utilization: More butts in seats going places. But we humans travel erratically, so building enough robotaxis to meet peak demand would inevitably mean a lot of empty ones for long stretches of the day, a downside known as 'deadheading'. In addition, AVs can struggle with some of the most profitable but complex routes such as picking up and dropping off at the automotive melee known as the airport line. A better model, at least for the foreseeable future, would involve a baseload of AVs covering a steady diet of rides supplemented by human drivers serving the more lucrative demand surges as well as routes that befuddle robots. Also Read: Tesla's robotaxis are here: Everything you need to know This takes us to a wider point raised by Uber's deal: No one yet knows what success in the autonomy market will look like. In this case, Uber is capitalizing on its own success—free cash flow doubled last year to $6.9 billion—and the struggles of Lucid to secure a pipeline of high-end electric robotaxis. But that is just one of several bets it is making. In April, it announced an agreement with Volkswagen to deploy the latter's Buzz electric vans for autonomous rides in Los Angeles, targeting commercial operation in 2026. And rather than outright competitors, Uber and Waymo are more like frenemies, with the latter's robotaxis operating exclusively through Uber's app in Atlanta and Austin. The robotaxi business is ripe for such cross-cutting competition and collaboration. Besides the hardware and software mix in the vehicles themselves, there is a surrounding ecosystem—cleaning and maintenance, charging, network management and, often overlooked, remote customer service and tele-operations for when robotaxis or passengers require assistance. Beyond this, there is an opportunity for AV developers to license their technology to legacy firms like Detroit's automakers, which have struggled with in-house efforts at self-driving cars. One company that stands apart from all this is Tesla. Mostly vertical integration served the company well in disrupting the auto market with desirable EVs. The benefits in AVs are, thus far, less clear. Last month's launch of Tesla's long-delayed robotaxi service in a patch of Austin has been disappointing, relative at least to the stratospheric expectations set over the years by CEO Elon Musk and which underpin Tesla's triple-digit earnings multiple. Also Read: Elon Musk floats a new source of funding for xAI: Tesla One of this new market's central debates is whether Tesla's cheaper camera-based general-autonomy model can beat the more expensive, gradualist approach using multiple sensors such as Lidar that characterizes Waymo's rollout. Tesla's limited Austin rollout undercuts its high-buzz narrative, but its resilient stock speaks to the strength of belief in Musk's ability to not merely take the lead, but outright crush the competition. Yet, in launching its service, Tesla has started the clock on having to demonstrate real progress. In some ways, the dream of a robotaxi was more valuable to the company than actual deployment. Meanwhile, competitors are placing multiple bets in multiple markets, knowing that some may pay off while others become footnotes. It will be years before we can judge the success of Uber's latest move. For Tesla's stock, priced for dominance, it's a problem already. ©Bloomberg The author is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy. Topics You May Be Interested In Catch all the Business News, Market News, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint. Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates.

Bengaluru auto driver scrolls actor's profile mid-ride, passenger rants on Reddit
Bengaluru auto driver scrolls actor's profile mid-ride, passenger rants on Reddit

India Today

time38 minutes ago

  • India Today

Bengaluru auto driver scrolls actor's profile mid-ride, passenger rants on Reddit

A passenger's Reddit post about a distracted auto driver in Bengaluru has sparked outrage on the r/Bangalore forum under the post titled 'Can't They Keep Their Phones Down While Driving?', the user described how a routine 10-minute Uber auto ride turned into a nerve-wracking that particular day, it was important for the user to reach office in 20 minutes for an important call and assumed they'd make it on time after boarding the auto. Things turned bizarre, however, moments after the ride 'As soon as I got into the auto, the driver looked at the map for a second, minimised it, and then opened Instagram,' the user said. What happened next left them stunned. Not only was the driver scrolling through his feed while operating the vehicle with one hand, but also slowed down in the middle of a busy road just to check out actor Sreeleela's profile.'He literally stopped just to scroll through her photos. I was furious and helpless. I could see the minutes ticking away,' the user the post here: In the comments section of the post, several others shared similar stories of distracted auto and scooter drivers. 'Almost every single driver I have seen on the road is on their phone. It is only the heavy traffic that is preventing too many accidents,' a user said.'That sounds so frustrating! Slowing down in the middle of the road to check out a celebrity's profile is just reckless,' another user shared frustration over how auto drivers often pull over suddenly without warning, all while glued to their screens. 'Traffic rules are only for others. Auto drivers have their own,' another quipped.- EndsMust Watch

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store